The Lobster Quadrille
is a seven-piece band steeped in faded-lace Southern gothic pathos, ethos,
superstition, and doom. Sepia-toned songs of cotillions, consumption,
damnation, elation, and salvation pour out like the sweat on frontman Solomon Blaylock's brow. The band's ragtag hobo
instrumentality ---- clarinet, organ, tambourine, bucket, washboard, slide
whistle, kazoo, pots 'n' pans, and odds 'n' ends, along with the more
rudimentary guitar, bass, and drums --- gives The Lobster Quadrille the feel of
a post-war carnival...if that carnival were to break out in the middle of a
funeral.

On stage, band leader
Blaylock's rabid preacher-with-a-hard-on stance induces vertigo. You could very
easily write him off as mad until you hear his lyrics and his story. He's been
rejected by one religion, embraced by another, and almost created a third on
his own. His music tells the story, following a weathered timeline of
indoctrination, belief, doubt, rejection, elation, and redemption. It's a
journey where he's picked up a band --- followers, if you will --- along the
way to spread the word. The bandstand is his pulpit.

In her novelWise Blood, Flannery O'Connor writes
of a young man, Hazel Mote, whose faith has gone awry. He dons a preacher's
garb and tone, surrounds himself with assorted
villains, and founds The Church Without Christ. It's dark, moody, and viciously
romantic. Just like The Lobster Quadrille.

But unlike Mote,
Blaylock's religious redirection --- and the ensuing music
--- do not consume him. He doesn't come across misguided or as one bent
on leading others astray, even though it's possible, what with his charisma and
the music's salacious appeal.

But Solomon Blaylock ain't a preacher. And he doesn't necessarily need an amen.

"I'm actually a
practicing Buddhist," he says. "For a while I just didn't want to do with
anything. But I think part of me is just hardwired as a religious maniac."

Blaylock has genuine Dixie pedigree. He grew up in rural Georgia and Alabama as one of Jehovah's Witnesses. But
from early on there were ideological conflicts, especially for a kid who asked
questions and liked rock 'n' roll.

"Listening to good
music," he says, "obviously there were things that weren't Christian. There was
always that line, and you'd catch shit for certain things."

As he grew, so did
the conflict. Blaylock had moved to New
York to do religious volunteer work. He was living in
what was the Jehovahs' equivalent to a monastery. His
questioning got louder.

"The fact that we
believe there's only one thing," he says, "I don't believe that makes sense. To
act like there's absolute truth, to me, is ridiculous."

After much
deliberation and a sit-down with church elders, Blaylock left the church.

"Well, officially
they kicked me out," he says. "They call it dis-fellowshipping.
It's like a shunning."

Since the age of 12
he'd been playing music and writing songs. Now it would become paramount.
Religion had always been in his music, but now it was gonna
get tweaked and twisted with no small amount of rage.

"It's always been
there," he says. "It's just never been as explicit. When I was a teenager
everything was couched in metaphor. And it wasn't until I started The Lobster
Quadrille stuff that things got more overtly religious and even over the top in
ways."

It's very easy to
see the anger and conflict in his face and hear it in his lyrical noir:

I'm weary with this singing bout mad
Southern belles

I'm sick and tired of chronicling other people's hells

The thrill of decay is all gone, and I ain't
fighting for it

The gossamer wing of hope lighted on me, but I tore it

Blaylock literally
seethes and writhes on stage --- at first to the delight of the crowd, then to
their alarm, and ultimately to a sort of acceptance and understanding. He's
clearly exorcising demons. He's exercising 'em, too.
You may not see them, but you can hear them...laughing.

"When I first broke
with the church," he says. "That's when the dam broke and everything was very
'Jesus' and waving the Bible. I was really saying 'Fuck
you' about it. I was really kind of spitting on it and laughing at it a bit. I
was just angry because I felt betrayed."

Tell me why, lord. Tell me why

Why my passions are so fickle and so blind

It's plain to see that I'm

Sick to death of my own mind

Yet beneath this
struggle and fury and bile lies the band's beautiful, beautiful music; music
that sashays and swings like a lop-sided waltz. It's gentle and elegant with a
dash of dread.

"I just always had
this picture in my head of what old swampy Southern music would sound like,"
Blaylock says. "I'd heard things here and there that hinted at it."

Blaylock even named
the band after an old Lewis Carroll poem "because it just sounded old Southern
to me," he says.

But the music was
more a vision than a sound in his head, which brings us back to Flannery
O'Connor --- and artist/musician Dame Darcy.

"Their imagery, the
things that she [O'Connor] wrote and the things that she [Darcy] painted, they
made a very clear sound in my head. And I just started to work that out."

Two self-released CDs
(and a third in the oven) later, he's still working it out.

Things started off
alone on acoustic guitar.

"People would hear it
and like the energy of it or like it because it was quirky," he says. "But it
was always difficult finding people who really understood it, could get into
it, and play it well; which is why I feel so lucky now."

The Lobster Quadrille
gathers for practice in an old South Wedge carriage house. Amidst a
congregation of beer bottles and pizza boxes the band members sprawl about the
room. This line up has been together just under a year.

Though they all face
Blaylock, for the most part their eyes are closed while they play. Perhaps
they're just listening intently. Maybe they're trying to see what their leader
sees.

The band is loosely
strung together with an air of the unorthodox. But what could potentially
descend into a clattering cacophony comes off gentle --- quirky, but gentle,
and perhaps a little risky.

Keith Rosengren floats between bucket and organ as the song or
mood dictates. The band boasts multiple arrangements for each song. Rosengren plays wingman in Blaylock's vision.

"I fill in what's not
there," he says. "I'm a bit of FlavaFlav to his Chuck D. But more so like an organist in the
church who's there to build the crowd up when the guy's goin'
into his preachin'."

And in keeping with
Blaylock's visual aspect, foley/percussionist Lauren Manitsas' hands spend a fair amount of time in the air
waving joyfully when not beating a tambourine.

Amy MacDonald's
clarinet is one of the few voices of sanity, as she weaves in and out of the
clatter and glee.

And
even though bassist Kevin Ferrel and drummer Mark Berends brandish more conventional artillery, they still
play into the Quadrille's madness.

It's kind of a
well-executed free-for-all.

"I always liked the
idea that eventually this would just be like a hootenanny and people could jump
up on stage and clang on things," Blaylock says. "Like
playing in the kitchen."

Amber McAlister grew
up in Georgia
near Blaylock. She's known him since they were 12. She also flies the Flannery
flag.

McAlister is
Blaylock's girlfriend and The Lobster Quadrille's foley
stage. Her haphazard shift from washboard to slide whistle to kazoo and beyond
is what gives the band its tent revival tack. She gets it.

"It's not always the
same every time," she says. "It definitely depends on the feel. For most of the
songs there's a ramshackle feel."

Strumming a washboard
with a spoon and tootin' on a kazoo with her eyes
closed, McAlister comes off placid, as if she's somewhere spiritual.

"I have a strong
sentimental feeling toward a lot of the songs," she says, "because of the
connection to the South, to how I grew up, and definitely some of the things
that I felt: the repression, the sadness that came along with the religion. So
I suppose it's cathartic. I guess that's why everybody
does music."

"Maybe it's an easy
way to God for those of us who find music to be divine," Rosengren
suggests.

The Quadrille has
played mostly rock joints where audiences get the religious fervor right off.
They just may not know quite how deep it runs, dismissing the band's sound and
Blaylock's holy-roller antics and "biblical theatrics," as he likes to call
them, as showbiz shtick. The band's black Sunday-go-to-meetin'
garb may raise suspicion as well, or at least curiosity.

I'm content with
whatever," he says. "I mean, if folks are just entertained by the show, then
that's fine. But the majority of the feedback I get when people come up... they
seem to... it does feel like a spiritual experience. It's just something you get
swept up into --- which I think is what live music is anyway."

"I think people like
a spectacle," McAlister says. "I think they enjoy seeing someone rant and rave...
I always describe the band as the warm, wet washcloth of Southern religiosity
being wrung out over the next generation. And it's kinda
sweaty."